Sonny and Another v Premier of the Province of Kwazulu-Natal and Another (4026/2003) [2009] ZAKZPHC 33; 2010 (1) SA 427 (KZP) ; [2010] 1 All SA 169 (KZP) (7 August 2009)

85 Reportability

Brief Summary

Medical negligence — Duty of care — Plaintiffs alleging breach of duty by healthcare providers — Second plaintiff claimed damages for birth of child with Down Syndrome due to failure to advise on risks during pregnancy — Plaintiffs asserted that had they been properly informed, they would have opted for termination — Court found that the first defendant owed a duty of care and breached this duty, resulting in damages — Liability established against the first defendant for the consequences of the negligent conduct.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned a delictual and contractual damages action arising from alleged negligent antenatal care and counselling within the public health system, culminating in the birth of a child with Down syndrome and an associated claim relating to an allegedly unlawful bilateral tubal ligation (sterilisation).


The plaintiffs were Kishore Sonny and Jayanthie Devi Sonny, husband and wife. The defendants were the Premier of the Province of KwaZulu-Natal (cited as the authority responsible for Addington Hospital and related provincial health services) and the eThekwini Municipality (responsible for the Clare Estate Clinic, a primary healthcare facility).


The action was instituted in December 2003. The parties agreed that liability would be determined separately from quantum under Rule 33(4), and the trial proceeded on separated issues over several sittings between March 2007 and March 2009. During the resumed trial on 1 December 2008, the second defendant (the municipality) made a with-prejudice settlement offer on liability, conceding 33⅓% of the plaintiffs’ damages. The plaintiffs accepted, and the lis between the plaintiffs and the municipality fell away. The case then continued only against the first defendant (the Premier).


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether failures in antenatal management and communication—particularly following an ultrasound scan suggesting the need for a repeat scan—wrongfully deprived the second plaintiff of a timely opportunity to make an informed decision, including the possibility of a lawful termination of pregnancy, and whether the later sterilisation was performed without informed consent.


2. Material Facts


The material facts included that the second plaintiff conceived a child in February 2002 and, at the relevant time, was approximately 37 years old, placing her in a category described by expert evidence as advanced maternal age and therefore high-risk for certain complications including chromosomal abnormalities.


On 25–26 June 2002, the second plaintiff attended the Clare Estate Clinic and was referred to the antenatal clinic at Addington Hospital. At Addington Hospital, an ultrasound scan was performed at approximately 17 weeks’ gestation. The scan report noted that the foetal head was low and difficult to assess, that the lateral ventricles appeared prominent, and recommended a repeat scan in two weeks’ time.


A central factual dispute concerned what occurred at Addington Hospital immediately after the scan. The plaintiffs’ version was that the second plaintiff saw a doctor who reviewed the report, told her to return for a re-scan in two weeks, and instructed her that the clinic (Clare Estate) would handle the booking or referral process for the repeat scan. Acting on this, the second plaintiff returned to the clinic on the same day but found it closed and spoke to a nurse, who advised (incorrectly, on the plaintiffs’ version accepted by the court) that there were only two ultrasound scans in pregnancy and that there was nothing wrong with the report. The second plaintiff then remained under clinic monitoring and did not return for the Addington re-scan.


The first defendant’s position was that the second plaintiff did not see a doctor at Addington Hospital on 26 June 2002 and that she would not have required a fresh referral to return to Addington for a re-scan; on this version, the failure to return was placed substantially at the second plaintiff’s door.


In October 2002, complications were detected at the clinic (including abnormal blood pressure and sugar readings), leading to further referral and investigation. A later ultrasound at Addington suggested concern described to the second plaintiff as “water on the baby’s head”, and she was referred to King Edward VIII Hospital, where a cordocentesis was performed on 28 October 2002 to test the foetus’s chromosomal composition. The result was reported as negative for Down syndrome. The second plaintiff was accordingly informed that the baby was normal.


On 16 November 2002, the second plaintiff delivered by caesarean section, and a bilateral tubal ligation was performed. The second plaintiff had signed a consent to sterilisation, and the first plaintiff also signed. After birth, the baby was determined to have Down syndrome.


The second plaintiff testified (and the first plaintiff supported this) that if she had been told timeously of a substantial risk of severe physical or mental abnormality, she would have elected to terminate the pregnancy. This assertion was material to the causation enquiry on the “wrongful birth” damages claim.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine whether the first defendant’s servants were negligent (and/or in breach of alleged contractual duties) in their management of the second plaintiff’s pregnancy, with particular focus on the events following the 26 June 2002 ultrasound and the arrangements (or lack thereof) for the urgently recommended repeat scan.


The central legal questions included whether the conduct of Addington Hospital staff in effectively sending the second plaintiff back to the clinic for arrangements created a foreseeable risk that she would not return for the re-scan, and whether reasonable steps were taken to guard against that risk, given the time sensitivity of antenatal diagnostic pathways.


A further legal issue was one of causation: whether any proven negligence was causatively linked to the birth of the child with Down syndrome, including whether earlier proper counselling and follow-up would probably have resulted in termination of the pregnancy in terms of the Choice on Termination of Pregnancy Act 92 of 1996.


The court also had to decide whether alleged negligence after 23 October 2002, including issues surrounding the cordocentesis and the reported negative result, was proved, and if so, whether it was causatively linked to the plaintiffs’ loss (including whether termination would have been offered or performed at that stage of pregnancy).


Finally, the court had to determine whether the sterilisation procedure constituted a wrongful act due to absence of informed consent, in circumstances where the second plaintiff contended that her consent was vitiated because she would not have agreed had she known the baby had Down syndrome.


The dispute involved a combination of fact (what occurred on 26 June 2002; what was communicated; what systems were in place), application of law to fact (negligence and causation), and evaluative determinations (credibility findings; reasonableness of medical steps; foreseeability; and the weight of probabilities on competing hypotheses).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached negligence through the established test in Kruger v Coetzee 1966 (2) SA 428 (A), emphasising foreseeability of harm and the reasonableness of steps that should have been taken to prevent it. It also relied on Kruger v van der Merwe and Another 1966 (2) SA 266 (A) in relation to foreseeability not requiring prediction of the exact form or extent of harm, but rather the general nature of harm that might eventuate. In addressing the duty of medical practitioners to provide clear instructions when a patient must play a role in follow-up care, the court considered the reasoning quoted in Dube v Administrator 1963 (4) SA 260 (T).


A key turning point was the court’s factual finding on the contested events of 26 June 2002. The court accepted the plaintiffs as honest and credible witnesses, particularly the second plaintiff’s account that she saw a doctor, was told to return for a re-scan in two weeks, and was sent back to the clinic for the arrangements. The court considered her immediate return to the clinic on the same day as a strong probability indicator supporting her version, reasoning that this conduct was unlikely unless she had been directed to do so. It also found support for the plaintiffs’ version in the first defendant’s own pre-trial responses under Rule 37(4), which indicated that she was told to come back in two weeks and that “normally the clinic makes the booking for the patient”.


Having accepted that the second plaintiff was in effect placed back into the clinic system for arranging the re-scan, the court considered whether Addington Hospital staff were negligent in how this was handled. The court accepted that the second plaintiff was a high-risk patient and that the first ultrasound scan at least raised a “red flag” (including the prominence of ventricles as a soft marker), making timely follow-up important. While the court assumed in the first defendant’s favour that immediate same-day re-scanning might not have been practical due to logistical constraints, it emphasised that once the patient was sent “out of the hospital’s control”, the attending doctor bore a “heavy responsibility” to ensure proper counselling and clarity.


Applying the negligence test, the court held that a reasonable doctor would have foreseen the possibility that the patient might “fall through the cracks” and not return for urgent follow-up, particularly where the patient relied on public primary health facilities and might receive incorrect advice. On this basis, the court concluded that Addington staff were negligent for failing to ensure that the second plaintiff was properly informed and counselled, including an intelligible and detailed explanation of the risk, the meaning of the inconclusive scan, and the absolute necessity of urgent re-scanning. The court further held that reasonable steps would at least have included providing or causing to be provided written instruction to the clinic to make clear that a re-scan was required, thereby reducing foreseeable breakdowns in communication.


On contributory negligence, the court—drawing on the approach quoted in Dube v Administrator 1963 (4) SA 260 (T)—held that the second plaintiff’s failure to return for the re-scan was attributable to the way she was instructed and then misled within the healthcare system. It therefore found no contributory negligence on her part. The court added that contributory negligence would, in any event, not reduce the claim insofar as it was framed contractually.


On causation, the court concluded that the negligence it identified (the failure to ensure effective follow-up and counselling after the 26 June 2002 scan) was causatively connected to the birth of the child, holding that but for such negligence the child “would not have been born”. The reasoning proceeded on the premise that proper follow-up at an earlier stage would have enabled timely diagnosis and afforded an opportunity for termination in terms of the statute.


The court nonetheless addressed the later allegations regarding negligence after 23 October 2002, including the cordocentesis. It held that negligence relating to the cordocentesis and laboratory testing was not proved on a balance of probabilities. The court accepted Dr Govender’s evidence that she performed the procedure competently and that there was no basis to infer contamination or mishandling, and it found the laboratory evidence professional. Importantly, it considered laboratory evidence suggesting that even if maternal contamination had occurred, the chromosomal abnormality would likely still have been detected as a mosaic result, which undermined the plaintiffs’ contamination theory.


Further, the court held that even if negligence at that late stage had been proved, causation would fail because, on the evidence of Dr Govender, the policy in 2002 was that foeticide would not be performed for a viable foetus diagnosed with Down syndrome at that stage; accordingly, the second plaintiff would not have been afforded the opportunity to terminate the pregnancy at approximately 34 weeks.


Regarding the sterilisation claim, the court evaluated the contention that consent was not “informed” because the second plaintiff would not have consented had she known the child had Down syndrome. The court held that, at the time consent was obtained and the caesarean was performed, the attending staff reasonably believed the baby would be normal because the cordocentesis result had been negative. The court accepted evidence that the caesarean surgeon’s priority is controlling maternal bleeding and completing surgery, and that Down syndrome features can be subtle at birth and masked by blood, such that the abnormality might not be apparent to the operating surgeon at the critical moment. On this basis, it was not persuaded that the first defendant’s servants acted wrongfully, intentionally, or negligently in performing the tubal ligation.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court held that the first defendant (Premier of KwaZulu-Natal) was liable to the plaintiffs for such damages as they could prove arising from the birth of the child on 16 November 2002, based on negligence in the management and communication surrounding the required follow-up after the June 2002 ultrasound.


On the separate claim relating to the sterilisation/tubal ligation, the court found that liability was not proved and ordered that the first defendant be absolved from the instance on that claim.


The first defendant was ordered to pay the plaintiffs’ party-and-party costs to date, including (where applicable) the costs of employing two counsel, costs relating to consultations with experts (including travel time and expenses), the expenses of certain witnesses declared necessary, and the qualifying and attendance fees and expenses of specified expert witnesses.


The court further ordered that the liability for costs described above would be joint and several with the second defendant up to and including 1 December 2008, reflecting the second defendant’s earlier participation in the proceedings before the settlement on liability.


Cases Cited


Kruger v Coetzee 1966 (2) SA 428 (A)


Kruger v van der Merwe and Another 1966 (2) SA 266 (A)


Dube v Administrator 1963 (4) SA 260 (T)


Legislation Cited


Choice on Termination of Pregnancy Act 92 of 1996


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 33(4)


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 13


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 37(4)


Held


The court found that the Addington Hospital staff (for whom the first defendant was responsible) were negligent in the manner in which the second plaintiff was handled after the initial ultrasound scan at approximately 17 weeks’ gestation, particularly by failing to provide adequate counselling and to take reasonable steps to ensure that the urgently recommended repeat scan would occur.


It held that the identified negligence was causatively linked to the eventual birth of the child with Down syndrome, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to pursue and prove damages flowing from the birth.


The court rejected the plaintiffs’ allegations of negligence regarding the later cordocentesis and associated laboratory processes, holding that negligence was not proved on a balance of probabilities and, in any event, that termination would not have been offered at that stage under the relevant policy evidence.


The court also rejected the claim that the sterilisation was wrongful for lack of informed consent, concluding that the evidence did not establish intentional or negligent wrongdoing by the first defendant’s servants in performing the tubal ligation in the circumstances.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Negligence was assessed with reference to the principles in Kruger v Coetzee 1966 (2) SA 428 (A), requiring foreseeability of harm and a failure to take reasonable steps to prevent it, and the foreseeability principles in Kruger v van der Merwe and Another 1966 (2) SA 266 (A), which do not demand foresight of the precise harm, but only the general nature of harm.


Where a medical practitioner justifiably relies on a patient (or another part of the health system) to implement a component of care, the court applied the principle, drawn from the discussion in Dube v Administrator 1963 (4) SA 260 (T), that there is a heightened duty to give clear, intelligible, and unambiguous instructions and warnings; failure to do so can found negligence when the patient’s non-compliance results from inadequate instruction or being misled.


On contributory negligence, the court applied the approach reflected in Dube v Administrator 1963 (4) SA 260 (T), namely that a plaintiff is generally not contributorily negligent where the apparent lack of care was induced or reasonably caused by the defendant’s conduct that misled the plaintiff into believing that inaction would not endanger safety or health.


Causation in a medical-negligence context was treated as requiring proof that the established negligence was causatively linked to the complained-of harm on a balance of probabilities; where a late-stage diagnosis would not have resulted in termination due to institutional policy and ethical practice (as proved on the evidence), the causal chain was held to be absent for that late-stage negligence claim.

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[2009] ZAKZPHC 33
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Sonny and Another v Premier of the Province of Kwazulu-Natal and Another (4026/2003) [2009] ZAKZPHC 33; 2010 (1) SA 427 (KZP) ; [2010] 1 All SA 169 (KZP) (7 August 2009)

REPORTABLE
Case
No 4026/2003
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF
KWAZULU-NATAL, PIETERMARITZBURG
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
In
the matter between :
KISHORE
SONNY
First
Plaintiff
JAYANTHIE
DEVI SONNY
Second
Plaintiff
and
PREMIER
OF THE PROVINCE OF
KWAZULU-NATAL
First
Defendant
eTH
EKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
Second
Defendant
______________________________
_____________________
Delivered
:
7 August 2009
J U D G M E N T
___________________________________________________
LEVINSOHN
DJP
INTRODUCTION
[1]
During
December 2003 first and second plaintiffs, husband and wife,
instituted an action against the first defendant, the premier
of the
province of KwaZulu-Natal, and the second defendant
the
eThekwini Municipality. In the first instance the two plaintiffs
claimed payment of an amount of R6
600 000-00
from the defendants jointly and severally, alternatively, the first
defendant, and further alternatively, the second
defendant.
The
second plaintiff claimed an amount of R150 000-00 from the
defendants.
[2] In
support of the relief claimed the plaintiffs made the following
allegations in their particulars of claim which I briefly
summarise.
[3] During
February 2002 the second plaintiff conceived a child whose natural
father was the first plaintiff. At that time second
plaintiff’s
age was approximately 36.5 years.
[
4] During
or about the 26
th
June 2002 the second plaintiff attended at the Clare Estate clinic
which was under the control of the second defendant. She became
a
patient at that clinic. Thereafter she was referred to the
antenatal clinic at Addington Hospital under the control of the
first
defendant.
[5] The
plaintiffs aver that a contract was concluded between the second
defendant and the second plaintiff. The material terms
of such
contract were that the second plaintiff would receive advice and
treatment at the clinic in connection with her pregnancy,
that advice
and treatment would be carried out with due and proper care and
skill. In addition the second defendant’s servants
would take
reasonable steps to establish whether there existed a substantial
risk that the foetus would suffer from any severe
physical or mental
abnormality. If such a risk existed the second defendant’s
servants would timeously advise the second plaintiff
and afford her
an opportunity of electing whether to terminate her pregnancy in
terms of the Choice on Termination of Pregnancy
Act, 1996 (Act No 92
of 1996).
[
6] The
plaintiffs further allege that the servants of the second defendant
owed a duty of care to the plaintiffs to take all reasonable
steps to
ensure that the second plaintiff would be advised timeously of any
substantial risk that the foetus would suffer from
a severe physical
or mental abnormality.
[
7] During
the periods 25
th
June 2002 to 22
nd
October 2002 the second plaintiff was treated and advised at the
Clare Estate clinic on the following dates 25
th
June, 26
th
June 2002, 30
th
July 2002, 27
th
August 2002, 1
st
October 2002 and 22
nd
October 2002. On two dates, namely 26
th
June 2002 and 22nd October 2002 it is alleged that the second
plaintiff was referred by the personnel at the Clare Estate clinic
to
the antenatal clinic at Addington Hospital. On the first mentioned
date the second plaintiff became a patient at Addington
Hospital.
She was diagnosed as being pregnant with a foetus of seventeen weeks
gestational age. An ultrasound scan indicated
that the head of the
foetus was low and difficult to assess but that the lateral
ventricles of the brain appeared prominent.
[
8] The
plaintiffs allege that the second plaintiff concluded an agreement
with the first defendant in terms whereof she would receive
treatment
and advice and that such treatment and advice would be carried out
with due diligence and skill. In particular the first
defendant’s
servants would take all reasonable steps to establish whether there
existed any substantial risk that the foetus
would suffer from any
severe physical or mental abnormality. If so they would advise the
second plaintiff accordingly and afford
her the choice of terminating
the pregnancy in terms of the said Act. An allegation is also made
that the first defendant owed
the second plaintiff a duty of care.
[
9] It
is alleged that both on 26
th
June 2002 and 23rd October 2002 the second plaintiff underwent an
ultrasound scan. On 28
th
October 2002 a cordocentesis was performed on the second plaintiff.
This was a procedure to determine the chromosomal composition
of the
foetus.
[
10] On
16
th
November 2002 the second plaintiff gave birth to a girl. The child
suffered from Down Syndrome. At the same time the first
defendant’s
servants performed a bilateral tubal ligation upon her which rendered
her permanently incapable of natural procreation.
It is averred
that this procedure was performed without the second plaintiff’s
informed consent.
[1
1] It
is further averred that the first defendant’s servants breached
their obligations in terms of the alleged agreement and
also they
acted unlawfully and negligently in breach of the duty of care. The
particulars of claim go on to allege various grounds
of negligence
which at this stage it is unnecessary to traverse but I shall
presently focus on the pleadings in more detail.
[1
2] It
is alleged that had the second plaintiff been properly advised she
would have caused the pregnancy to be terminated. Instead
she gave
birth to a child who is severely physically and mentally disabled and
will be unable to support herself. The plaintiffs
are in
consequence obliged to support the child for the rest of her natural
life. Thus the first head of damage mentioned above.
[1
3] The
claim for R150 000-00 is alleged to be the damage suffered by the
second plaintiff in consequence of the unlawful performance
of the
tubal ligation mentioned above.
[1
4] The
first and second defendants in due course delivered pleas and joined
issue. At this issue it is unnecessary to traverse
those documents.
Later in this judgment I shall refer thereto if it becomes
necessary.
[1
5] The
trial of this action commenced on 12
th
March 2007 and proceeded on the following days 13
th
,
14
th
and 15
th
.
The parties had agreed that the issue of liability should be
determined in terms of Rule 33(4) and it was ordered accordingly.

The trial was then adjourned and resumed again on 9
th
June 2008. Evidence was led on 9
th,
10
th
,
11
th
June whereafter the trial was again adjourned. When the trial
resumed on 1
st
December 2008 the second defendant had instructed a new counsel, Mr
Naidoo. Counsel informed the Court that the second defendant
had
made a “with prejudice” offer to settle the issue of liability
with the plaintiffs. In essence the second defendant conceded

liability for 33⅓% of the plaintiffs’ damages. Plaintiffs’
counsel announced that the offer was accepted. It followed

therefore that a valid agreement of settlement had been concluded
between the plaintiffs and the second defendant and that therefore

the
lis
between
them had fallen away. Consequently counsel for the second defendant
was given leave to withdraw.
[1
6] It
became clear after debate between counsel and the Court that inasmuch
as the first defendant had not sought to join the second
defendant as
a third party joint wrongdoer in terms of Rule 13 nor did it allege
that the second defendant was liable to make any
contribution to it,
this essentially boiled down to the fact that there was no
lis
between the first and second defendants. The second defendant thus
effectively fell out of the picture.
[1
7] Notwithstanding
that it had resolved the matter with the second defendant the
plaintiffs persisted in pursuing their case against
the first
defendant. The trial proceeded. Evidence was concluded on 2
nd
December 2008. The Court heard argument on 26
th
March 2009. Judgment was reserved on that date.
THE EVIDENCE IN
THE CASE
[
18] It
is convenient at this stage to set forth in summary form the salient
evidence which I conceive to be relevant to the issues
which fall to
be decided in this case.
[
19] The
second plaintiff was the first witness called by her side. She
testified that on 25
th
June 2002 she went to the Clare Estate clinic which is under the
control of the second defendant. That clinic is close to her
home
and she had attended at that clinic for the birth of her first child.
According to the second plaintiff she went to the
clinic early in
the morning. She underwent a registration process and was given a
green card which was handed in as exhibit “A2a”.
She was then
directed to the nurse in charge where her medical history was taken,
including the fact that her first pregnancy
had been a normal one and
a normal delivery. She indicated that there was a family history of
diabetes and high blood pressure.
The nurse then took some blood
samples and did a urine, blood pressure and diabetes check. The
second plaintiff was told that
she should come to the clinic the next
day in order to receive a referral letter to Addington Hospital.
When she returned to
the clinic the following day the nurse performed
another sugar test and then gave her a referral letter to Addington
Hospital.
The referral letter was handed in as exhibit “95a”.
According to the second plaintiff it was sealed in a brown envelope.
[20] The
second plaintiff arrived at Addington Hospital and she showed the
nurse in charge her referral letter. The second plaintiff
had
overheard that same nurse at Addington Hospital announcing that no
one would be seen unless they were in possession of a referral

letter. The second plaintiff then underwent a registration process
at Addington Hospital. She handed her green card, exhibit
“A2a”
to the clerk for that purpose. All the information which she gave
to the clerk was recorded on a computer.
[21] The
second plaintiff that her husband, the first plaintiff, accompanied
her and was present when she registered.
[22] The
second plaintiff was then told to see a nurse who also did a urine,
blood tissue, sugar test as well as a weight check.
[2
3] The
second plaintiff said that she then saw a doctor. When asked to
give a description of the doctor she said the following
: -
“
She
was an Indian female. She was not a South African.
Why do you say she is not a
South African?      Because I could make
out from her tone of – the
way she spoke.
LEVINSOHN
DJP
Her accent?      Her accent, the way she
spoke.
Who
did she speak like? Came from India, or Mauritius?
More or less India, if not India, Pakistan
or something.
”
[2
4] When
asked what happened when she went to the doctor she said that the
doctor examined her and referred her to the ultrasound
room. She
said that when she was examined the doctor placed a cone on her
stomach and pressed her hands thereon. While this
was happening her
husband was outside waiting on the bench. The second plaintiff said
that she was directed by the doctor to
the ultrasound room : -
“Go
down the passage, turn left and you’ll find the ultrasound”.
[2
5] She
described the ultrasound procedure. She said that a gel was applied
to her stomach and an object was rolled around her
stomach. The
person performing the procedure was watching a screen as she did
that. Thereafter she was handed the ultrasound
examination report
which was apparently computer-generated. She was told by the Indian
radiographer that she must take the report
to the doctor and also
that she needed to be re-scanned in two weeks’ time.
[26] The
second plaintiff returned to the doctor that she had previously seen.
On her way while she walked down the passage she
said that she read
the ultrasound examination report and remembered reading the words
“the head was low and difficult to assess.”
She also remembered
reading the words “suggest re-scan in two weeks’ time”. At
that stage no one had suggested that there
was anything wrong with
the foetus. No one had suggested to her at that stage that she was
indeed a high-risk patient.
[
27] The
second plaintiff said that she returned to the same doctor. The
second plaintiff testified as follows and I quote
verbatim
: -
“
MR
HARTZENBERG
Thank you, M’Lord. Ms Sonny, did you then, as you were
requested to do, go back to that same doctor?

Yes, I did, M’Lord.
And what
happened there?      I handed my
ultrasound
examination report to the doctor. She read it and she asked me to
come back in two weeks’ time.
LEVINSOHN
DJP
Did she say why?      No, she did not.
Did she tell
you you were a high risk patient?      Not
at all.
Did she tell
you that there might be some dangers in your pregnancy?
No, M’Lord.
MR
HARTZENBERG
Was any appointment made for you at Addington Hospital or to
return?      I asked her for an appointment,

M’Lord, and I was
told
I need to go to the Clare Estate Clinic as they were to refer me to
Addington Hospital.
LEVINSOHN
DJP
But surely, you’d already been referred and that would just be –
this is just a follow-up on, why would you have to go back
to Clare
Estate to be referred once again? Did you ask them why?
I said to her, “I need a referral
letter to come here because the
nurse would not attend to me in the front, she won’t let me to go
and register at the desk”
and then I said to her I need an
appointment. She said, ”no, we do not make appointment at
Addington”.
Yes, so she
told you you had to go back to
Clare
Estate to get a letter?      Clare Estate,
yes, M’Lord.”
[
28] The
second plaintiff said that she and her husband on the same day
returned to the Clare Estate clinic. They found the clinic
had
closed. There were no patients there. She knocked on the door. A
nurse came to the door and the second plaintiff explained
to her why
she was at the clinic. She told this nurse that she had been at the
clinic that morning and had been given the referral
letter to
Addington to have an ultrasound examination done. She showed the
nurse the ultrasound report and told her that she
was advised by the
doctor to come back in two weeks’ time for a re-scan. The nurse
in question read the report and told the
second plaintiff that there
are only two ultrasounds done, one early in the pregnancy and one
later. She described this nurse
that she had spoken to as a senior
person. This nurse wore a green uniform and actually told her that
there was nothing wrong
with her ultrasound report and everything was
in order. Acting on the advice of this particular nurse the second
plaintiff did
not return to Addington Hospital for a re-scan.
[29] What
in fact happened was that she remained at the Clare Estate clinic
which monitored her pregnancy from time to time. According
to the
second plaintiff her next follow-up was on 30
th
July 2002 and thereafter on 27
th
August, 1
st
October and 22
nd
October 2002 respectively. From time to time the second plaintiff
attempted to remind the nurses at the clinic that she needed
a
re-scan and drew their attention to the first scan which was stapled
to the green patient card, exhibit “A2a”.
[30] On
22
nd
October 2002 the second plaintiff went to the clinic for a routine
check. On that day it was found that her blood pressure and
her
sugar readings were abnormally high. She was given medication and
told to lie down. It was then decided that she should
be referred
to Addington Hospital for an ultrasound scan. She was given a
referral letter. This is exhibit “A93a”.
[31] At
Addington Hospital an ultrasound examination was performed and once
again she was referred back to a doctor. The doctor
read the new
ultrasound report which appeared to indicate that there was “water
on the baby’s head”. She was then given
a referral letter
to
King Edward VIII Hospital on 24
th
October 2002.
[32]
At
King Edward VII Hospital she saw a Dr Kirsten. She explained why
she had come from Addington. She showed him her ultrasound

examination report as well as the first ultrasound report. Dr
Kirsten advised her that they would need to investigate whether
the
baby had Down Syndrome. He referred her to a Dr Govender who
performed a cordocentesis. This test was performed on 28
th
October 2002. The results became available some time in November
2002. She was informed by Dr Kirsten that the tests showed
that the
baby was normal.
[33] On
15
th
November her baby was born by caesarean section. The second
plaintiff said that prior to undergoing this operation she signed
a
consent to sterilisation. Her husband, the first plaintiff, also
appended his signature to the form. She said that she agreed
to do
this because she believed there was nothing wrong with her baby.
[34] After
the baby was born it was determined that she had
Down
Syndrome.
[35] The second
plaintiff said that if she had been told that there was a substantial
risk that the foetus would suffer from severe
physical or mental
abnormality she would have terminated the pregnancy immediately.
[36] I turn now to
the first plaintiff’s evidence. The first plaintiff said he was
the husband of the second plaintiff. He
confirmed her evidence that
he had accompanied the second plaintiff to Addington Hospital. He
said that his wife had seen a doctor
on that occasion. He was
sitting outside on a bench. His wife was attended by an Indian lady
doctor. She came out of the
consulting room and showed the second
plaintiff where the ultrasound room was. He accompanied her to the
ultrasound room. When
she emerged from the ultrasound room he
accompanied her back to the doctor’s room where they had been
earlier. The first plaintiff
also confirmed his wife’s evidence
to the effect that if they had known about the abnormality he would
have agreed to terminate
the pregnancy.
[37] Professor van
Gelderen was the first of three expert witnesses called by the
plaintiffs. He is a specialist obstetrician
and gynaecologist. He
is at present professor emeritus at the Witwatersrand University and
is employed at Baragwanath Hospital
as a senior specialist.
[38] He
had the opportunity of perusing the various documents connected with
the second plaintiff’s case history. He confirmed
from these that
she had become pregnant in 2002. On 25
th
June 2002 she was 37 years of age. He said that 37 years of age is
regarded as “advanced maternal age” because it renders
a patient
more susceptible to certain complications, in particular the
incidence of congenital abnormalities. In particular genetic

chromosomal abnormalities. Patients of this advanced maternal age
are also prone to suffer from hypertension and diabetes.
However
pregnancy is not precluded at this age if it is managed properly.
[39] The
professor said that normally pregnant women are managed in primary
health care facilities, like the clinic in this case.
However if
certain alarm bells ring which would include complications
that
arise during pregnancy or if there are pre-existing features such as
age, hypertension or diabetes, such patients should be
referred for
care at a higher level.
[40] The
professor was asked to comment on the initial ultrasound examination
performed on the second plaintiff at seventeen weeks.
He said this
was performed to assess gestational age and to look for any foetal
abnormalities. He noted that the ventricles
were enlarged and that
was a “soft marker” of Down Syndrome. He said that had he been
the consulting physician he would have
kept her as a patient of
Addington, or if necessary, referred her to King Edward VIII Hospital
for further elucidation. He agreed
with the suggestion that once
one reads the ultrasound report “alarm bells start ringing”. He
accepted that the suggestion
that she be re-scanned in two weeks’
time was a reasonable procedure. Arrangements should have been made
for that to have happened.
[41] I
turn now to review
the factual evidence given by the first defendant’s witnesses.
[42] Dr Devjee is
the head of the antenatal clinic at Addington Hospital. She is a
registered obstetrician and gynaecologist.
She was asked about the
protocol applied to patients who are referred from outside clinics to
Addington Hospital. She said they
are registered. The referral
note is attached to their patient card which they have brought from
the clinic. The nursing staff
then take blood. She confirmed that
patients will not be seen unless they do have a referral note. She
said that a patient
that has already undergone a scan and who is told
that a repeat scan is required will need to make an appointment for
that. This
appointment is made by the clerk at the hospital. She
said that another referral note will not be required.
[43] According to Dr
Devjee at about 8.00 am in the morning there are no doctors present
at the antenatal department of the hospital.
These doctors are
doing ward rounds and they come to the clinic much later. The
nursing staff in fact order the various tests.
In a case where an
ultrasound is done, the results of this together with all the other
tests are put together and the patient
waits for a doctor to assess
her : -
“
LEVINSOHN
DJP
So the patient, after these tests are done, the patient will see a
doctor? --- Yes, M’Lord.
A doctor will for example look
at the ultrasound? --- That is correct, the doctor will review all
the results, M’Lord.
The doctor will review the
results.”
[44] Dr Devjee was
adamant that a doctor would record all her observations on the
patient’s card. If she was told to attend
for a follow-up that
too would be recorded.
[45] In the instant
case although the second plaintiff had had an ultrasound done there
was no record that she had seen a doctor
because nothing was recorded
on her card. Because of that Dr Devjee insisted that she had not in
fact seen a doctor. Dr Devjee
commented on the first scan taken.
She said in the light of this scan it was not unreasonable to re-scan
in two weeks’ time.
This more so in the light of the fact that
the head of the baby was difficult to assess and if a re-scan was
performed in two
weeks’ time the position of the baby may have
changed and this feature would have been more readily observed.
[46] Dr
Devjee also that in her hospital there was no system in place to
follow-up whether a patient returns for a re-scan or not.
Dr Devjee
made the point that if the nursing staff at the Clare Estate clinic
had read the scan it would have been manifestly
clear to them that
they needed to send this patient back for a re-scan. The witness
also made the point that the fact that the
patient did not return to
the hospital meant that the hospital lost out and were not in a
position to perform further tests which
may well have resulted in the
termination of the pregnancy. In Dr Devjee’s opinion there rests
a responsibility upon the patient
to return to the hospital.
[47]
I
turn now to summarise the evidence of Dr L. Govender.
[48] Dr
Govender attended to the second plaintiff at the King Edward VIII
hospital. On 24
th
October 2002 she performed the cordocentesis. She explained that
this is also known as foetal blood sampling. To her knowledge
she
was the only person at that time in KwaZulu-Natal who performed this
procedure. She enumerated her qualifications in foetal
medicine
which included an honorary research fellowship towards a Master’s
degree. She explained that this procedure is performed
under direct
ultrasound guidance. The placenta is visualised and they
specifically look for the area of the cord insertion, the
placenta
cord insertion. A centimetre of the cord is visualised and a spot
is found wherein a needle is inserted. This needle
is visualised on
the ultrasound monitor. Thereafter the witness described in detail
how the blood is drawn with the assistance
of a nurse. She
explained that the first millilitre of blood is discarded and another
two to four millilitres taken. This first
millilitre is discarded
because they wish to reduce the risk of maternal contamination. Dr
Govender was adamant that she had
properly performed this procedure.
She recalled that this was one of the best she had ever done. In
her opinion there was no
possibility that the blood specimens
withdrawn were contaminated by maternal blood.
[49] Dr
Govender also said, importantly, that s foeticide could be performed
where there is gross malformation present. She said
that in her
hospital a fair number of these are done. When asked whether such
foeticide would be performed on a foetus which
has been diagnosed as
having
Down
Syndrome she answered in the negative. She said that the view that
was taken in 2002 was that because they were unable to
predict the
severity of Down Syndrome on a prenatal ultrasound in respect of a
foetus that had become viable, the baby would be
given the benefit of
the doubt. In those circumstances they were would not perform a
foeticide. She admitted however that after
2006 the policy had
changed and a foeticide would be performed on a Down Syndrome foetus
after 24 weeks.
[50] Dr
Govender also said that even if the results of the cordocentesis had
come back positive for
Down
Syndrome they would not have performed a foeticide.
[51] In my opinion
the summary of the evidence of the abovementioned witnesses provides
a broad overview of the factual issues that
arise in this case.
There were of course several other witnesses that testified, some of
them at length, but in the view I take
of this case it is unnecessary
to summarise their testimony in any detail.
[52] I
proceed now to consider whether the plaintiffs have discharged the
onus of proving liability on the part of the second defendant
on the
various grounds set out in the pleadings. It is of course common
cause that second plaintiff gave birth to a baby which
was afflicted
with Down Syndrome. Stripped to bare essentials her case is that
the medical professionals charged with the duty
of monitoring her
pregnancy breached their obligations in various respects. More
particularly they failed at an early stage of
her pregnancy to
perform the various tests that are required to determine whether the
foetus was normal or whether it suffered
from a genetic abnormality.
All the expert witnesses that testified were in agreement that the
second plaintiff was a high-risk
patient. Her age alone proclaimed
that her pregnancy ought to have been monitored at a higher level of
medical care.
[53] It
appears to me that from the outset the staff of the Clare Estate
clinic were alive to this. Given her history of diabetes
and her
age the second plaintiff was indeed referred to the obstetrics unit
of Addington Hospital. There is a major dispute of
fact between
plaintiffs’ and the first defendant’s servants in regard to the
events which transpired on 26
th
June 2002. Counsel for the first defendant has argued strenuously
that the second defendant’s evidence is unsatisfactory and
falls to
be rejected. His principal hypothesis is that she is the sole
author of her misfortune inasmuch as she failed to return
to the
hospital when she was instructed to do so. According to the first
defendant’s version of events, the second plaintiff
did not see a
doctor on that day nor was she instructed to return to the clinic to
obtain a second referral to the hospital.
The first defendant’s
case is quite simply that once a patient of Addington and having been
registered on its system there was
no need for such a further
referral. The system and the various protocols applicable at
Addington Hospital were articulated by
Dr Devjee who maintained
throughout her evidence that given the absence of records to that
effect, the second plaintiff had not
seen a doctor on that day.
[54] I
would say at once that both plaintiffs, in particular the second
plaintiff, made a very good impression on me. I have no
doubt
whatsoever that they are honest witnesses. The second plaintiff
gave me the impression that she was giving an honest and
spontaneous
account of what occurred on that day. The alleged inconsistencies
and/or discrepancies appear to me to be of no moment
whatsoever.
The second plaintiff said, and this was corroborated by her husband,
that after the registration process she went
to a doctor. She
describes the doctor as a female doctor of overseas Indian origin.
She sa
id
that doctor directed her to the ultrasound. She had the ultrasound
and returned to the doctor who read her scan and told her
simply that
she must return for a re-scan in two weeks’ time. This same
doctor told her that it is the clinic that will make
an appointment
for this second scan. She returned to the clinic that very day for
that purpose. None of the defendants ever
disputed the fact that
she did so. In my view this conduct on her part highlights an
overwhelming probability in favour of her
version. Why else would
she go back to the clinic if she had not been told to do so?
Somebody had told her and in my view it
is overwhelmingly probable
that it was a doctor that had done so. One recalls Dr Devjee’s
evidence that in the normal course
of events a patient such as the
second plaintiff would inevitably be seen by a doctor who would
review her ultrasound scan. Dr
Devjee was inclined to concede when
questioned that it was strange that on the first defendant’s
version she had simply walked
out of the hospital after having the
scan without seeing anyone.
[55]
There
is a further matter which casts doubts on first defendant’s
version. In paragraph 22(d) of the plaintiffs’ particulars
of
claim the following allegations were made : -
“The
Second Plaintiff, when seen on 25 June 2002, alternatively on 26 June
2002, was assessed as being high risk because she was
diabetic.”
[56] The reply by
the first defendant is of significance : -
“
AD
PARAGRAPHS 22(c), (d) AND (e)
Save
to state that the servants of the Second Defendant failed to make a
booking for Second Plaintiff for a follow up scan, First
Defendant
has no knowledge of the remainder of the averments contained
therein.”
[57] In the
plaintiffs’ Notice in terms of Rule 37(4) the following enquiry was
made : -
“2. The
Plaintiffs will address the following enquiries to the First
Defendant, namely :
(a) The First Defendant is
requested to describe the procedure of referral of maternity
patients from Clare Estate Clinic
to Addington Hospital which
applied during the period June to October 2002.
(b) How many obstetric
ultrasound examinations were routinely performed on each
patient at the Addington Hospital Ante-Natal
Clinic during such
period?
(c) What are the reasons why
the Second Plaintiff was not given a fixed appointment for a
follow-up ultrasound examination
on 26 June 2002 while she was
at Addington Hospital?”
[58] The first
defendant provided the following answer to question 2(c) above : -
“
AD
PARAGRAPH 2(c)
She was told to come back in two
(2) weeks. Normally the clinic makes the booking for the patient.”
[59] The enquiry
posed in 2(n) was as follows : -
“Did
the servants of the First Defendant take any steps to up (
sic
)
when the Second Plaintiff did not return to Addington Hospital within
two weeks after 26 June 2002? If so, the First Defendant
will be
requested to provide full particulars with regard to such steps taken
by the First Defendant’s servants.”
[60]
The
answer to this was as follows : -
“
No,
the clinic must have referred her in two (2) weeks’ time for a
follow up scan
.”
[61]
I
have quoted extensively from the pre-trial exchange of information to
demonstrate that the first defendant’s legal advisers
were
obviously instructed by their client to provide the information that
they did and there has been no explanation for this.
Dr Devjee’s
protestations therefore have a hollow ring to them. The same would
apply to Dr Praveen’s evidence. As indicated
above the first
defendant’s answers serve to substantially corroborate the
plaintiff’s version.
[62] I
accordingly reject the first defendant’s version. I find as a
fact that the plaintiff was sent back to the clinic by
the doctor
that had seen her. This event set in motion a chain of events which
ultimately led to the unfortunate consequence
tha
t
the second plaintiff gave birth to a Down Syndrome child. The
second plaintiff returned to the clinic and was given advice which

was palpably wrong. Any health professional at the clinic applying
her mind would have realised, firstly, that the second plaintiff

required to be re-scanned. Furthermore, that the second plaintiff
was a high-risk patient because of her age and she needed to
be
monitored at a higher level of care. More importantly the patient
herself conveyed this information not only to the nurse
that saw her
on 26
th
June but subsequently when she reported at the clinic for her
follow-up monitoring. In my opinion the servants of the second

defendant were grossly negligent and it is not at all surprising that
the second defendant was advised to conclude a compromise.
[63] The
issue of whether the first defendant’s servants were negligent or
not must be approached from an entirely different vantage
point. I
have found as a fact that the second plaintiff was told that it was
the clinic that would make an appointment for her
second scan. She
was also told that this re-scan would take place in two weeks’
time. The issue is whether the servants of
the first defendant have
been shown to have been negligent in not ensuring that an appointment
was made there and then by the hospital
for the re-scan. The
question then is whether by sending her back to the clinic these
servants created the risk that she may
not return and therefore oculd
not be subjected to the early tests to determine whether she carried
a Down Syndrome child.
[64] The
test for negligence has been laid down in several cases.
One
of the leading cases seems to me to be
Kruger
v Coetzee
1966
(2) SA 428
AD where Holmes JA said at 430 E the following : -
“For
the purposes of liability
culpa
arises if -
(a) a
diligens
paterfamilias
in the position of the defendant -
(i) would
foresee the reasonable possibility of his conduct injuring
another in his person or property and causing him
patrimonial
loss; and
(ii) would take reasonable steps to guard against such
occurrence; and
(b) the defendant failed to take
such steps.
This
has been constantly stated by this Court for some 50 years.
Requirement (a) (ii) is sometimes overlooked. Whether a
diligens
paterfamilias
in the position of the person concerned would take any guarding steps
at all and, if so, what steps would be reasonable, must always
depend
upon the particular circumstances of each case. No hard and fast
basis can be laid down. Hence the futility, in general,
of seeking
guidance from the facts and results of other cases.”
[65]
In
regard to foreseeability the principles laid down in
Kruger
v van der Merwe and Another
1966
(2) SA 266
AD are of importance. Williamson JA said the following
at page 272 F : -
“The
doctrine of foreseeability in relation to the remoteness of damage
does not require foresight as to the exact nature and
extent of the
damage; cf.
American
Restatement of the Law
,
Torts (Negligence), para. 435. It is sufficient if the person
sought to be held liable therefor should reasonably have foreseen
the
general nature of the harm that might, as a result of his conduct,
befall some person exposed to a risk of harm by such conduct.”
[66]
I
am called upon to apply these principles to the facts in casu. At
the outset the observation is made that the plaintiffs are
an
unsophisticated middle-class couple and obviously not persons in a
high-earning bracket. This is evidenced by the fact that
they use
the public health facilities. In the ordinary scheme of things one
would expect the second plaintiff to respect and
adhere to any
instructions and directions given to her by the medical personnel
charged with her case.
[67] All
the experts in the case were agreed that the second plaintiff was a
high-risk patient principally because of her age.
The risk of her
giving birth to a Down Syndrome child was ever present. The first
ultrasound scan revealed, at the very least,
a “red flag”. I
accept that she was told by both the doctor and the sonologist that
she had to undergo a re-scan. I have
accepted as a fact that the
doctor she saw told her that she had to return for a further scan.
It would obviously have been desirable,
given that in matters of this
nature time is of the essence, for the scan to have been done on the
very same day while she was
in the precincts of the hospital. I
shall assume in favour of the first defendant that, having regard to
the number of patients
that attend and other logistical difficulties
that such a system was not practical at the time.
[68] However
once the patient is sent out of the hospital’s control, as it were,
there rests a heavy responsibility on the attending
doctor to
properly inform and counsel the patient. A reasonable person in
the position of a doctor would foresee the reasonable
possibility of
the patient falling through the cracks and not returning to the
hospital and secondly, given the vagaries of the
primary health care
facilities she might receive the defective and almost bizarre advice
from a member of the clinic staff that
she did in fact receive. It
was incumbent on the doctor to inform the second plaintiff in detail
of the risks she faced and precisely
what the effect was of the
inconclusive scan and the absolute necessity of having an urgent
re-scan.
[69] I would go
further. Having regard to the foreseeable consequence of some
breakdown of communication or gross misunderstanding
that may occur
in the clinic environment, I think it was at least necessary for the
doctor to have given or caused to be given
some written instruction
to the clinic to make it absolutely clear that the second plaintiff
was required to return.
[70] My
view is fortified by the
dicta
contained
in the case of
Dube
v Administrator
1963
(4) SA 260
at 268 – 269, a judgment of Trollip J (as he then was).
The learned judge quoted passages from a work by Lord Nathan
“
Medical
Jurisprudence
”
and from a Canadian case
Murrin
v
James
.
I quote from both these and the highlighted portions have been
inserted by me : -
(Page 268)
“
'In
many cases it is reasonable or even necessary for the medical man to
make the patient himself responsible for the performance
of some part
of the treatment which the medical man has undertaken to give.
Where, as often happens, the medical man's course
of action depends
upon a report by the patient as to his condition or symptoms or as to
the progress of the treatment, the medical
man has no choice in the
matter; he must rely upon the patient for the necessary information
by which to determine what action
should be taken, and must
therefore, in a sense, delegate to the patient part of his own
duties. Frequently also it would be quite
unreasonable to expect the
medical man to be in constant attendance upon the patient or to
exercise supervision over every detail
of the treatment; he is
compelled therefore to delegate to the patient the performance of
some part of the treatment or cure.
In
all these cases where the medical man justifiably delegates to the
patient the performance of some part of the treatment, there
is a
special duty towards the patient to give clear and unambiguous
instructions, to explain to the patient in intelligible terms
what is
required of h+im and to give him any warning
which
may be necessary in the circumstances; and a failure in any of these
respects may amount to a breach of duty and expose the
medical man to
liability for any injury which occurs.'
”
(Page 269)
“
'I
am prepared to believe that in some kinds of cases, particularly in
this domain of medicine and surgery, the failure by a doctor
or a
surgeon to warn a patient as to the meaning of certain symptoms, the
significance of which might not be apparent to a layman,
might
properly expose a practitioner to a charge of negligence. The
physician cannot always be in constant attendance upon his
patient,
who may have to be left to his own devices; and if the former knows
of some specific danger and the possibility of its
occurring, it may
well be part of his duty to his patient to advise him of the proper
action in such emergency.'”
[71] The learned
judge also dealt with the issue of whether the plaintiff concerned
was guilty of contributory negligence. He
said the following:-
(Page 270)
“
The
remaining enquiry is whether the plaintiff himself was guilty of
contributory negligence. It was contended that he was negligent
in
not returning immediately he noticed that the pain was persisting and
the swelling on the Thursday or Friday. His reasons
for not doing
so have already been set out fully.
They
show that his inaction at the critical stage was entirely due to the
lack of proper instruction and warning about his returning
on the
part of the Hospital, as canvassed above.
This is a classical situation for the application of the principle
which for the present purpose may be summarised thus: A plaintiff
is
generally not guilty of contributory negligence if his ostensible
lack of care for his own health or safety was caused by the
conduct
of the defendant which induced or misled him to believe or assume
reasonably that his action or inaction would not endanger
his health
or safety.”
[72] To
sum up then,
I
conclude that the servant or servants of Addington Hospital were
negligent in the respects set out above and that for purposes
of any
delictual action there is no contributory negligence on the part of
the second plaintiff. In any event no such contributory
negligence
can be taken into account as far as the plaintiffs’ contractual
claim is concerned.
[73] This
negligence was causatively related to the birth of the child which
but for such negligence would not have been born.
The finding of
causative negligence recorded in the previous paragraph, strictly
speaking, makes it unnecessary for me to consider
whether the
allegations of negligence on the part of the first defendant’s
servants
after
23
rd
October 2002 have been proved. However in case this case goes
further I shall set forth my finding in that regard.
[7
4] One
recalls that that at this stage the second plaintiff’s pregnancy
had almost reached full term. She was referred back
to Addington
Hospital during this period because complications arose. The second
plaintiff was subjected to tests at both Addington
Hospital and King
Edward VIII Hospital. The cordocentesis performed by Dr Govender
was intended to exclude the possibility of
any genetic abnormalities.
It is common cause that the result of the foetal blood test was
negative. However we know for a
fact that something went wrong
either in the manner in which the test was performed or in the
analysis of the samples at the laboratory.
On this part of the case
the plaintiffs’ contention is that there was negligence on the part
of the first defendant’s servants,
particularly Dr Govender. Dr
Govender has testified that she was satisfied that she performed the
test properly and that there
was no possibility of the foetal blood
being contaminated by maternal blood. She specifically remembered
performing the test
and recalled that this was one of the best
procedures she had performed. There is no reason to doubt Dr
Govender’s expertise.
Nor is there any basis to hold that she was
negligent in any respects. At the same time there is no evidence to
suggest that
the samples taken could have been confused with anybody
else’s blood samples.
[7
5] The
evidence of Mrs Kavonic who is in charge of the laboratory
establishes also in my view that the testing was performed in
a
highly professional manner and by persons with the necessary
experience and expertise. Considering all the evidence on this

issue I am constrained to come to the conclusion that the case is
entirely in balance and that there is no preponderance of probability

in favour of the plaintiffs’ hypothesis in the case.
[76] Reverting
to the issue of the cordocentesis and the probability that maternal
blood had contaminated the foetal blood, thus
distorting the results,
there is an aspect in the evidence of Mrs Kavonic which in my view is
of importance. Questioned by me
at page 455, the following is
recorded : -
“LEVINSOHN
DJP Just explain something to me. Let us assume as a hypothesis
that you received the sample, which is contaminated
by the mother’s
blood. Now obviously you would not have the problem of male/female
thing. You know it is a female, because
of the mother. --- Yes.
But what would the effect of
this contamination be on the reading of the chromosomes in general?
--- If – should we have received
a foetal blood specimen that was
contaminated with maternal cells, then I would have expected to see
both normal female cells,
which would be the maternal, and the
21:21translocation of the foetus. So we would have seen what we
term a mosaic, two different
cell lines.
Yes,
that is what I was getting at. I other words what I was really
getting at is that the fact of this contamination would not
have
blurred the 21:21 chromosome? - No.
You would still have seen that?
--- I believe we would have seen it in a proportion of the cells,
yes.”
[7
7] The
significance of this is that even if it is assumed that there was
contamination the testing of the blood would nonetheless
still
revealed the presence of Down Syndrome in this sample. The effect
of this evidence is that the contamination theory which
is said to
distort the results completely carries no weight in my view.
[7
8] I
find therefore on this part of the case that the plaintiffs have not
proved any negligence on the part of the first defendant.
[79] Even
assuming I am wrong in the above conclusion and the first defendant’s
servants were negligent, I am of the view that
the first defendant’s
servants would not have terminated the pregnancy, in the sense of
performing a foeticide. Dr Govender
said that in 2002 the ethical
policy of the first defendant was not to regard a viable Down
Syndrome foetus as a “malformation”.
A foeticide would not be
performed in those circumstances. The conclusion therefore is that
even if the second plaintiff was
told that she carried a Down
Syndrome child she would not have been given the opportunity to
terminate the pregnancy at 34 weeks.
[80] In
the result on this part of the case the plaintiffs fall to be
non-suited on the issue of whether the negligence of the first

defendant is causatively related to the damage suffered.
[81] I turn finally
to consider whether in the circumstances the sterilisation of the
second plaintiff or the tubal ligation procedure
performed on her was
wrongful.
[82] The main thrust
of second plaintiff’s case is that the consent to the procedure was
obtained without her informed consent.
What this means is if she
had been told she was carrying a Down Syndrome child she would not
have consented.
[83] The
plaintiff gave birth by caesarean section on 16
th
November 2002. The hospital notes reflect that a note was made on
19
th
November 2002 that the baby had a dysmorphic appearance which
according to Professor van Gelderen is not suggestive of Down
Syndrome
per
se
but an appearance of abnormality. When the attending medical
personnel obtained the second plaintiff’s consent to the tubal

ligation they would have believed on very reasonable grounds that the
second plaintiff was about to give birth to a normal baby.
[84] One
must not lose sight of the fact that the caesarean section delivery
involves surgery and I have no hesitation in accepting
Dr Govender’s
characterisation of the situation which I quote hereunder in full : -
“
Doctor,
let us go on to the sterilisation of the second plaintiff. You have
listened to the evidence of Prof Nikolaou. Basically
the gist of
what he said was that when one at birth sees dysmorphic child,
despite the fact that there may be a consent to sterilisation,
one
would then not proceed with it out of caution. Do you agree with
that evidence
?
---
Unless
it is an obvious abnormality like an encephalon seal and in that
situation yes, I would say, because a sterilisation is not
a life
saving procedure, it could be deferred. But here in the case of
Downs, where there might just be subtle dysmorphic features,
and I
must add it is not the duty of the doctor performing the Caesarean
section to examine the baby at birth. His priority is
once that
baby is out to close up that uterus as soon as possible, otherwise
the patient is going to bleed. So his priority is
the mother and
not the baby. And facial features in Down syndrome can be subtle,
especially when covered with blood. So it
is not his priority to
examine the baby.
Doctor, the notes in the record
indicate that. The doctor must have made an observation that the
child was dysmorphic, abnormal
in appearance
.
---
Was
that the Caesarean section doctor’s notes?
Yes
.
---
He
probably made it retrospectively, not at the time when he took the
baby out.
And if I understood your
evidence earlier when I asked you about the clinical description of
the child on 19 November, if I understood
you correctly that would
not have differed from what one saw at the time of birth
.
---
Yes,
the difference being the baby at that time was covered with fresh
blood as well and he is not really examining the baby.
He may have
documented that in the notes after he has finished the Caesar and he
was informed about the baby, when the baby had
been cleared up.”
[85] Dr
Nicola
ou
said that it is possible that a junior surgeon doing the caesarean
may miss the dysmorphic appearance while performing the operation.

In any event, as Dr Govender points out, the surgeon’s main
priority is to make sure that the mother does not bleed to death.

The baby’s face is covered with blood at the moment of delivery and
it is hardly likely that the surgeon would at that stage
notice
subtle signs of abnormality in the baby’s appearance.
[86] I
am not persuaded on the evidence that the servants of the first
defendant in performing the tubal ligation committed any
wrongful act
either intentionally or negligently
vis
a vis
the
second plaintiff.
[87] In the result I
find that liability on this part of the case has not been proved.
[88] To sum up
finally I hold
(a) that
the first defendant is liable to the plaintiffs for any damage the
plaintiffs may prove arising from the birth of the child
on 16
November 2002;
(b) that
on the claim relating to the sterilisation of the second plaintiff,
the first defendant is absolved from the instance;
(c) that the first
defendant is directed to pay the plaintiffs’ party and party costs,
to date, which costs shall include:-
(i) where
applicable, the costs consequent upon the employment by the
plaintiffs of two counsel;
(ii) the costs
consequent arising from consultations with experts, including
travelling time and expenses;
the expenses of the
following witnesses who are to be declared necessary witnesses,
namely, : -
the first plaintiff,
the second plaintiff and Mrs S. J. Kavonic;
the reasonable
qualifying and attendance fees and expenses of the following expert
witnesses, namely : -
Professor
E. Nicolaou
;
Dr
J. Rosendorff
;
Professor
C. J. van Gelderen;
Mrs
S. J. Kavonic;
(d) The
liability to pay costs as set forth in (c) above shall be a joint and
several liability with the second defendant up to
and including 1
st
December 2008.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT :
7 AUGUST 2009
DATES
OF HEARING :
12,
13, 14, 15 MARCH 2007, 9,10, 11, 12 JUNE 2008, 1, 2
DECEMBER 2008, 26 MARCH 2009
COUNSEL
FOR
PLAINTIFFS
:
MR
C. J. HARTZENBERG SC
INSTRUCTED
BY :
CHRIS
MARTIN ATTORNEYS, DURBAN
C/0
LISTER & LISTER ATTORNEYS, PIETERMARITZBURG
COUNSEL
FOR
FIRST
DEFENDANT
:
MR
S. NANKAN
INSTRUCTED
BY :
STATE
ATTORNEYS, DURBAN
C/O
CAJEE SETSUBI CHETTY INC,
PIETERMARITZBURG
COUNSEL FOR
SECOND
DEFENDANT
: MR
C. J. PAMMENTER SC
THEN
MR
V.
NAIDOO
INSTRUCTED
BY :
LINDA
MAZIBUKO & ASSOCIATES, DURBAN
C/o
NGCOBO POYO & DIEDERICKS INC, PIETERMARITZBURG